Phyllida Barlow: Hoard

Norton Museum of Art / Courtesy

Dec. 3-Feb. 23 Norton Museum of Art, 1451 S. Olive Ave., West Palm Beach; 561-832-5196; norton.org Barlow's sculptures are towering testaments to recycled scrap, but don't say the 68-year-old British artist belongs on an episode of Hoarders. Her massive monuments, composed of cardboard, chicken wire, tarpaulins, wood pallets, cement and polystyrene, usually harvested in her own neighborhood, don't really resemble anything. In fact, they're anti-sculptures, as she views "the monument as a kind of absurdity." Barlow is the third artist at the Norton's ongoing Recognition of Art by Women (RAW) series. Pictured: "Broken Upturned House" by Phyllida Barlow

Dec. 3-Feb. 23 Norton Museum of Art, 1451 S. Olive Ave., West Palm Beach; 561-832-5196; norton.org Barlow's sculptures are towering testaments to recycled scrap, but don't say the 68-year-old British artist belongs on an episode of Hoarders. Her massive monuments, composed of cardboard, chicken wire, tarpaulins, wood pallets, cement and polystyrene, usually harvested in her own neighborhood, don't really resemble anything. In fact, they're anti-sculptures, as she views "the monument as a kind of absurdity." Barlow is the third artist at the Norton's ongoing Recognition of Art by Women (RAW) series. Pictured: "Broken Upturned House" by Phyllida Barlow (Norton Museum of Art / Courtesy)

Dec. 3-Feb. 23 Norton Museum of Art, 1451 S. Olive Ave., West Palm Beach; 561-832-5196; norton.org Barlow's sculptures are towering testaments to recycled scrap, but don't say the 68-year-old British artist belongs on an episode of Hoarders. Her massive monuments, composed of cardboard, chicken wire, tarpaulins, wood pallets, cement and polystyrene, usually harvested in her own neighborhood, don't really resemble anything. In fact, they're anti-sculptures, as she views "the monument as a kind of absurdity." Barlow is the third artist at the Norton's ongoing Recognition of Art by Women (RAW) series. Pictured: "Broken Upturned House" by Phyllida Barlow